ananyo writes “Hormone-disrupting chemicals may be far more prevalent in lakes and rivers than previously thought. Environmental scientists have discovered that although these compounds are often broken down by sunlight, they can regenerate at night, returning to life like zombies (abstract). Endocrine disruptors — pollutants that unbalance hormone systems — are known to harm fish, and there is growing evidence linking them to health problems in humans, including infertility and various cancers ‘Risk assessments have been built on the basis that light exposure is enough to break down these products,’ adds Laura Vandenberg, an endocrinologist at the University of Massachusetts in Amherst who was not involved in the study. ‘This work undermines that idea completely.'”… ananyo writes “Hormone-disrupting chemicals may be far more prevalent in lakes and rivers than previously thought. Environmental scientists have discovered that although these compounds are often broken down by sunlight, they can regenerate at night, returning to life like zombies (abstract). Endocrine disruptors — pollutants that unbalance hormone systems — are known to harm fish, and there is growing evidence linking them to health problems in humans, including infertility and various cancers ‘Risk assessments have been built on the basis that light exposure is enough to break down these products,’ adds Laura Vandenberg, an endocrinologist at the University of Massachusetts in Amherst who was not involved in the study. ‘This work undermines that idea completely.'”

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